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Student Credo Has Changed flings Ain't What They Used To Be' Veteran Night Watchman Quotes ! 'Things ain't what they used to be quoted Bill Trump, who todav m"^SerV;n 5 his e,ghteenth yearas State TefH the BlooLbu?g State Teachers College. When ask-3d to elucidate on somr ??J *u -anks and more teeinginci! tents which took place during he there, Bill-as'hels nonly known???merely ,mii.rt j??? ???atica???y and descrLd the ph*i" When he started work, there was gymnasium and the social m???, as a manual training S I interior of thp k iJ. ine '*???? &.?? s a were ash walks-now there are ce! th?y h-ve fh * do Whil 4uheir own dormitory jlw ??????? is an emergency systetl Near Second street there used truck patches and fields are now pavements, trees curb!3 flower bpric ??m,~ n UUIU!> andb an animal hoClege ??? wolves etc in , USe With lio???M Keller!' & WgJ- ???*i an uD-f.n.Ha(o ,??????C...__ ouse IS nowfv' li* , *"????????????? JJJeuy. be shut off a *> evening???now therp ic f n the night. Rooms are painStedStenam ???? stead of papered, , been installed, there 3Ve the floors; inside fill Z lmoJeum on old-tin,; flre e7hreplace back of the college has' hi? road creted, a stove room hL S? C??n' fa. a freight elevator has h?" *?Ut balled and dance ar 1? m' held in the dining" h_S To pufit jn other words-everythiL h been modernized veryinmS has | . During these eighteen ,??? I k?????? -??.-?? C--'gmeen years Riii has seen many ComP I!i Among those are Ear? ga of Michigan, who is the longest drop-kick eve? mtdT* the college football fleS de ?? "S Bill remember" irfc K^f man, Miss Conway, MisTst???**" W Rowe, all deans' ofwomen-^ iHartman Harvey Hartze^Georfe Booh ?alrgG Meade' Thornton Booth, Jackson, Dr. Reamer. The l only person who has been there longer than Bill is Mr. EngleW? " superintendent of ground! and I buildings, who has been there tw^.i Ijty-five years. This year customs are practical washed out. Many graduates of th B.S.T.C. remember the times the; [had their mouths stuffed with per simmons, were made to dress likC girls, wear bird cages on theij heads, had molasses and brand pu: in their hair and were subjected tc paddlings. Sundays were especially interesting. The men of North Hall took great pleasure in throwing some of their friends in the gold-fish filled lagoon. One of their greatest sports was a tug of war, held with a rope of about fifty feet in length. The particular year that the tug or war was a specialty ended with [Bill being presented with the rope One of the greatest differences Bill has noticed is the fact that the students spend more week-ends at their homes instead of the parents autoing to the college to spend the day_with their son or daughter. Senator Will Speak on Well Rounded Program . / V [Senator Gerald P. Nye, of North JLWKota, who will speak at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College on November 11 will speak as one of the statesman of America and is not appearing on the college artist's course under the auspices of the America First committee, college authorities said over the week-end The arrangements for Senator* Nye's appearance on the coursewe made several months ago as a part of a well rounded program in which prominent American statesmen will speak in Bloomsburg. The Senator will speak on the evening of Armjstice Day on an appropriate sub- Huskies Worn Down in Final 10/14/41 Lose by 26-0 To Mansfield After Holding to 7-0 in First Three Periods j Ground Attack Crushes Huskies Huskies Lose to Mansfield, Holding Them Until last Quarter 10/13/41 Bloomsburg College Huskies, making their first start of the current gridiron campaign, extended the favored Mansfield Mountaineers through three periods but finally bowed before a savage ground attack which swept over three touchdowns in the last quarter as Mansfield won, 26-0. 1 The Huskies, working under the handicap of a squad so small that 'real scrimmage is out of the question, was able to gain quite substantially but could not keep things m?.^wl?,eV,hey got near dirt. Whitey" Maslowski, one of a half dozen veterans on the squad was injured early in the third quarter and taken to the Mansfield in. Ifirmary with a slight concussion and Kidney injury. A 65-yard march in the first period gave Mansfield what proved to be the deciding score. The Mountaineers have a hefty line crashed in and some fast stepping backs to work with but it was a fast charging line which gave them the big advantage. In that first drive, confined entirely to ground plays, Cunningham, Parent! and Magalski did the leather lugging and the latter cracked center for the last 4 yards and Dowd place-kicked the point. Penalties nullified Mansfield scoring trrust in the second and third periods In the fourth the Mountaineers got rolling again and moved 68 yards The next time they got the ball they traveled 45 and then in the closing minutes of the game an intercented nass +u???-~ * the Husky 47, Parenti circling end for the last 40 and the biggest gain of the afternoon. Mansfield had the advantage of one game, that against Indiana a week earlier, and the Mountaineers were functioning much smoother. All of their scoring drives were on the same pattern. They pounded at the center and when the Huskies moved in to protect that salient they turned the flanks. ???JBloomsburg (0) Mansfield (26) . Schminky LE Novak Schuyler LT ???-Gamble Novak LG LaiW i^hlant?, RG Holzer iManenck RT Piccolo *erT :- HE McGraw M?????owski QB Magalski Rabb1 HB " Cunningham _ " xvHB Dowd Bloomsburg 0 0 0 o???o Mansfield 7 0 0 19???26 I Touchdowns???Magalski 2, Lentmi, Cunningham. Points after touchdowns: Dowd (placement): Lentini. (forward pass). Substitutions: Bloomsburg???Bitter, McGill, Kaslowski, Conte, Baker, Swmesburg, Wesnik, Chesney, Demaree, Bomboy; Mansfield???Martin, Cheplick, Casale, Lentini, Mancia, Liprulo. I Referee???Darkhurst, Springfield- Frederick, Battle Creek; Sullivan' 1 Syracuse. * First downs, pen. % First down, running .... 2 ???first downs, passes 4 Man. 0 17 0 17 319 Total first downs 8 Yards gained rushing 112 Yards lost rushing 00 Passes attempted Passes PfimnloUJ 34 6 uooca cuinpieieQ ... fl Yards gained passes".'! 74 1 3 g3 Passes intercepted by Punts g Average distance punts 38 C? 1 Average return punts .. 8 15 I Fumbles .. Penalties 2 2 65 Yards lost, penalties .. 10

Student Credo Has Changed flings Ain't What They Used To Be' Veteran Night Watchman Quotes ! 'Things ain't what they used to be quoted Bill Trump, who todav m"^SerV;n 5 his e,ghteenth yearas State TefH the BlooLbu?g State Teachers College. When ask-3d to elucidate on somr ??J *u -anks and more teeinginci! tents which took place during he there, Bill-as'hels nonly known???merely ,mii.rt j??? ???atica???y and descrLd the ph*i" When he started work, there was gymnasium and the social m???, as a manual training S I interior of thp k iJ. ine '*???? &.?? s a were ash walks-now there are ce! th?y h-ve fh * do Whil 4uheir own dormitory jlw ??????? is an emergency systetl Near Second street there used truck patches and fields are now pavements, trees curb!3 flower bpric ??m,~ n UUIU!> andb an animal hoClege ??? wolves etc in , USe With lio???M Keller!' & WgJ- ???*i an uD-f.n.Ha(o ,??????C...__ ouse IS nowfv' li* , *"????????????? JJJeuy. be shut off a *> evening???now therp ic f n the night. Rooms are painStedStenam ???? stead of papered, , been installed, there 3Ve the floors; inside fill Z lmoJeum on old-tin,; flre e7hreplace back of the college has' hi? road creted, a stove room hL S? C??n' fa. a freight elevator has h?" *?Ut balled and dance ar 1? m' held in the dining" h_S To pufit jn other words-everythiL h been modernized veryinmS has | . During these eighteen ,??? I k?????? -??.-?? C--'gmeen years Riii has seen many ComP I!i Among those are Ear? ga of Michigan, who is the longest drop-kick eve? mtdT* the college football fleS de ?? "S Bill remember" irfc K^f man, Miss Conway, MisTst???**" W Rowe, all deans' ofwomen-^ iHartman Harvey Hartze^Georfe Booh ?alrgG Meade' Thornton Booth, Jackson, Dr. Reamer. The l only person who has been there longer than Bill is Mr. EngleW? " superintendent of ground! and I buildings, who has been there tw^.i Ijty-five years. This year customs are practical washed out. Many graduates of th B.S.T.C. remember the times the; [had their mouths stuffed with per simmons, were made to dress likC girls, wear bird cages on theij heads, had molasses and brand pu: in their hair and were subjected tc paddlings. Sundays were especially interesting. The men of North Hall took great pleasure in throwing some of their friends in the gold-fish filled lagoon. One of their greatest sports was a tug of war, held with a rope of about fifty feet in length. The particular year that the tug or war was a specialty ended with [Bill being presented with the rope One of the greatest differences Bill has noticed is the fact that the students spend more week-ends at their homes instead of the parents autoing to the college to spend the day_with their son or daughter. Senator Will Speak on Well Rounded Program . / V [Senator Gerald P. Nye, of North JLWKota, who will speak at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College on November 11 will speak as one of the statesman of America and is not appearing on the college artist's course under the auspices of the America First committee, college authorities said over the week-end The arrangements for Senator* Nye's appearance on the coursewe made several months ago as a part of a well rounded program in which prominent American statesmen will speak in Bloomsburg. The Senator will speak on the evening of Armjstice Day on an appropriate sub- Huskies Worn Down in Final 10/14/41 Lose by 26-0 To Mansfield After Holding to 7-0 in First Three Periods j Ground Attack Crushes Huskies Huskies Lose to Mansfield, Holding Them Until last Quarter 10/13/41 Bloomsburg College Huskies, making their first start of the current gridiron campaign, extended the favored Mansfield Mountaineers through three periods but finally bowed before a savage ground attack which swept over three touchdowns in the last quarter as Mansfield won, 26-0. 1 The Huskies, working under the handicap of a squad so small that 'real scrimmage is out of the question, was able to gain quite substantially but could not keep things m?.^wl?,eV,hey got near dirt. Whitey" Maslowski, one of a half dozen veterans on the squad was injured early in the third quarter and taken to the Mansfield in. Ifirmary with a slight concussion and Kidney injury. A 65-yard march in the first period gave Mansfield what proved to be the deciding score. The Mountaineers have a hefty line crashed in and some fast stepping backs to work with but it was a fast charging line which gave them the big advantage. In that first drive, confined entirely to ground plays, Cunningham, Parent! and Magalski did the leather lugging and the latter cracked center for the last 4 yards and Dowd place-kicked the point. Penalties nullified Mansfield scoring trrust in the second and third periods In the fourth the Mountaineers got rolling again and moved 68 yards The next time they got the ball they traveled 45 and then in the closing minutes of the game an intercented nass +u???-~ * the Husky 47, Parenti circling end for the last 40 and the biggest gain of the afternoon. Mansfield had the advantage of one game, that against Indiana a week earlier, and the Mountaineers were functioning much smoother. All of their scoring drives were on the same pattern. They pounded at the center and when the Huskies moved in to protect that salient they turned the flanks. ???JBloomsburg (0) Mansfield (26) . Schminky LE Novak Schuyler LT ???-Gamble Novak LG LaiW i^hlant?, RG Holzer iManenck RT Piccolo *erT :- HE McGraw M?????owski QB Magalski Rabb1 HB " Cunningham _ " xvHB Dowd Bloomsburg 0 0 0 o???o Mansfield 7 0 0 19???26 I Touchdowns???Magalski 2, Lentmi, Cunningham. Points after touchdowns: Dowd (placement): Lentini. (forward pass). Substitutions: Bloomsburg???Bitter, McGill, Kaslowski, Conte, Baker, Swmesburg, Wesnik, Chesney, Demaree, Bomboy; Mansfield???Martin, Cheplick, Casale, Lentini, Mancia, Liprulo. I Referee???Darkhurst, Springfield- Frederick, Battle Creek; Sullivan' 1 Syracuse. * First downs, pen. % First down, running .... 2 ???first downs, passes 4 Man. 0 17 0 17 319 Total first downs 8 Yards gained rushing 112 Yards lost rushing 00 Passes attempted Passes PfimnloUJ 34 6 uooca cuinpieieQ ... fl Yards gained passes".'! 74 1 3 g3 Passes intercepted by Punts g Average distance punts 38 C? 1 Average return punts .. 8 15 I Fumbles .. Penalties 2 2 65 Yards lost, penalties .. 10